Rethinking the Youth Bulge and Violence

Volume 47 Number 3
Published: May 26, 2016
https://doi.org/10.19088/1968-2016.146
The dominance of a generation of combat age, high levels of education combined with high unemployment, failed cities, and the relatively long duration of the transitional period still constitute an appropriate atmosphere for the explosion of a new wave of youth violence in the Middle East. The author takes Egypt as a case study. Egypt witnessed an unprecedented spike in violence following the revolution of January 25, 2011. This article first examines the political violence through the lens of political demography, drawing partly on Henrik Urdal’s theses on the impact of demographic factors on the risk of political violence, but more broadly documents and analyses the trajectory of youth movements’ involvement with violence in relation to issues of employment, education and urbanisation.

Keywords:

  • Youth
  • Violence
From Issue: Vol. 47 No. 3 (2016) | Ruptures and Ripple Effects in the Middle East and Beyond